Hi
Dale,
>
Is it supposed to say "asynSuccess" at the end of the highlighted section? I get a "return 0".
Yes,
asynSuccess is an enum with the value 0.
Mark
From: Dale Cox <dale.cox at acu.edu>
Sent: Friday, April 14, 2023 8:43 AM
To: Mark Rivers <rivers at cars.uchicago.edu>
Cc: tech-talk at aps.anl.gov <tech-talk at aps.anl.gov>
Subject: Re: modbus ioc start
Thanks for the reply Mark.
(1) Yes I thought this was the case. Whenever I enable some asyn trace lines in the IOC, I can see the initial modbus request. It looks like this:
...
drvModbusAsynConfigure("Z8TC1_Config", "SenecaBus", 5, 6, 53, 4, "UINT16", 400, "SenecaZ")
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus asynManager::queueLockPort locking port
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus asynManager::queueLockPort created queueLockPortPvt=0x55ec3aba5df0
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus asynManager::queueLockPort created queueLockPortPvt=0x55ec3aba5df0, event=0x55ec3aba5e10, mutex=0x55ec3aba5eb0
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus asynManager::queueLockPort taking mutex 0x55ec3aba5eb0
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus asynManager::queueLockPort queueing request
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus addr -1 queueRequest priority 0 not lockHolder
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus schedule queueRequest timeout in 2.000000 seconds
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus asynManager::queueLockPort waiting for event
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 asynManager::portThread port=SenecaBus callback
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus asynManager::queueLockPortCallback signaling begin event
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus asynManager::queueLockPortCallback waiting for mutex from queueUnlockPort
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus asynManager::queueLockPort got event from callback
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 SenecaBus flush
2023/04/14 08:32:01.482 /dev/ttyUSB0 flush
2023/04/14 08:32:01.487 /dev/ttyUSB0 write.
2023/04/14 08:32:01.487 /dev/ttyUSB0 write 8
05 03 00 35 00 04 55 83
2023/04/14 08:32:01.487 wrote 8 to /dev/ttyUSB0, return asynSuccess
2023/04/14 08:32:01.487 asynOctetSyncIO wrote:
05 03 00 35 00 04
2023/04/14 08:32:01.487 /dev/ttyUSB0 read.
2023/04/14 08:32:01.495 /dev/ttyUSB0 read 13
05 03 08 d0 11 d2 00 d2 00 d2 11 3b 1c
2023/04/14 08:32:01.495 /dev/ttyUSB0 read 13, return 0
2023/04/14 08:32:01.495 SenecaBus read 13 bytes eom=0
05 03 08 d0 11 d2 00 d2 00 d2 11 3b 1c
2023/04/14 08:32:01.495 asynOctetSyncIO read:
03 08 d0 11 d2 00 d2 00 d2 11
2023/04/14 08:32:01.495 SenecaBus queueUnlockPort
2023/04/14 08:32:01.495 SenecaBus asynManager::queueUnlockPort waiting for event
2023/04/14 08:32:01.495 SenecaBus queueUnlockPort unlock mutex 0x55ec3aba5eb0 complete.
...
So I'm getting the requested registers back on that port, and you can see their values there. d0 11 is 1101000000010001 in binary, so when I look at the 15th bit, it should return back a 1. when I do a caget on that PV, I get a 0 (I get 0's for all of
the records associated with these registers).
Is it supposed to say "asynSuccess" at the end of the highlighted section? I get a "return 0".
Thanks for helping me troubleshoot.
Dale
Hi Dale,
- My issue is that the PV values aren't being updated when the IOC starts -- meaning that after the IOC start, the bo and mbbo values stored in that register don't match what was returned
via the initial modbus request.
I am not sure I completely understand what you are saying. Here is what should happen:
- Because this port you created uses function code 6 (write single register) and because you have a non-zero poll time, the driver will do one initial read of that register using function
code 3.
- EPICS device support for the bo records does a read operation from the port during init_record. If this read returns asynSuccess (which it should) then the value of the bo record
is set to the value read from the driver. This is the “bumpless reboot” concept.
- You have not set PINI=YES in these records, so the value from the record will not be written back to the device during iocInit. However, the record value should still match the device,
because of steps 1 and 2 above.
If I understand correctly you are saying that the bo record does have the correct value read from the device during steps 1-2. But now the device has a different value from that in the record? I don’t understand that, since it seems
like there must have been a write to the device to change the value?
Mark
Good Morning,
I have an IOC that is currently reading registers via modbus rtu over rs485. There are a set of registers that store multiple configuration options in a single register. I set up the port using this line:
> drvModbusAsynConfigure("Z8TC1_Config", "SenecaBus", 5, 6, 53, 4, "UINT16", 100, "SenecaZ")
I've enabled the debugging lines on this IOC. When the IOC starts, I can see that the correct registers are being retrieved when the port is created. I can also write config changes to those registers at their assigned PV's with no issues
that I have found. My issue is that the PV values aren't being updated when the IOC starts -- meaning that after the IOC start, the bo and mbbo values stored in that register don't match what was returned via the initial modbus request.
Here are a couple of the DB entries that I'm using:
record(bo,"$(P)$(R)-TC1_enable") {
field(DTYP,"asynUInt32Digital")
field(OUT,"@asynMask($(PORT), 0, 0x8000 )")
field(ZNAM,"Disabled")
field(ONAM,"Enabled")
}
record(bo,"$(P)$(R)-TC2_enable") {
field(DTYP,"asynUInt32Digital")
field(OUT,"@asynMask($(PORT), 0, 0x4000 )")
field(ZNAM,"Disabled")
field(ONAM,"Enabled")
}
record(bo,"$(P)$(R)-TC1-2_units") {
field(DTYP,"asynUInt32Digital")
field(OUT,"@asynMask($(PORT), 0, 0x2000 )")
field(ZNAM,"tempDegC")
field(ONAM,"mV")
}
--
Dale Cox
Instrumentation and Electrical Engineer
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